60 {J{Ø{ ct /fled !?leap j Creamy lustre, nicely tapered and matched. . . her gift to cherish through a lifetime. Necklace $65. Earrings $33. , Federal tax included. 14K white gold clasp and backs BLACK STARR4ÜORUAM MANHASSET FI FTH AVENUE AT 48TH STREET, NEW YORK 36, N. Y PLAZA 7-8100 MILLBURN II! .. L UL _ 1 ,,--. J " 'i& 0 }' ( .I. , i """' ( Ð -.JI4\'<>- ..' -s'''' , \0 ," I ..; .. " * ø' {;, ;, ; ' .. , ' f >\ ' I. . .." :- ..,;$. .. , tS-' J -, · '*' :." i$ f > J A'"" > , " i :: !* .". ""W b :' r'li } ., . \, , :', . ; . 'ell..., , -.(t", . t $ , (t:: a :, , : -: ' of' ", :;,,' " ,. " " lJr'\ :, .,./ ,,:" $t1tJ f,:.:' --,, ' rt ,., Ii WHITE PLAINS - " - s Obviously Villager . . . the full-skirted shirt dress of enduring fame, energetically printed with ski-things . . . mittens, mufflers, signs, skis, and sweaters. The collector of these classics will appreciate the smooth cotton, the autumnal depth of coloring. Pan collar, roll sleeves. Gold, Blue, or Green. Sizes 8 to 16. About eighteen dollars at good stores and college shops. " -:J " . . . . . . THE VILLAGER INC. 1407 Broadway, New York ----<'1 1 _T)r" L 1 'If 4114 hJl.I 1 & 'II &.- ago you'd have seen many of the pa- 6ents pacing around like caged animals, and you'd undoubtedl} have heard shouting and screaming. Some of our young doctors used to turn pale when they first tried to face it." I asked Dr Brill if he had been one of those who turned pale. He smiled. "I was lucky," he said. "I never had any visceral reactIon to psychotic behavior-I don't know quite why." As we strolled about the ward, a wiry little man came up and said, in a thick Slavic accent, "Please, I want to change my doctor. He not help me at all. No good." "Give him a little time," said Dr. Brill gently. "You've only been here a few weeks, haven't you? I know YO"Hr doctor. He's very good. Besides, he can speak your language. Give him a littlt: time. Will you do that for me? " Dr. Brill patted the man's arm, and we moved on. A curly-haIred youth whose face was so tense that the skin seemed to be drawn taut over the bones walked over to us. "I'm gonna bust," he said. "I'm all cooped up and I need to mOVe around more. Can't you get me some privi- leges? " "Boy," said Dr. Brill, putting an arm around his shoulders, "boy, I'll try. But I heard you were acting kInd of rough the other day. Don't work against yourself like that. Try it my way and ' 11 " you see. The young man stared intently at Dr. Brill, as though trying to compre- hend, and then slouched away. Dr. Bril1 turned to me and said, "Come over here. There's something I want to show you." He led me up to a short, handsome Puerto Rican youth who stood stiffly with his back to a wall, hIS face wooden and blank, his eyes star- ing straight ahead, his arms rigid at his sides. "C omo esta usted?" asked Dr. Brill. The youth turned slowly on his feet to look at Dr. Brill, as though his torso were paralyzed, and the two spoke in Spanish for a moment or two. "He says that they try to give him medicine but 3 creature living inside of him won't let him swallow it," Dr. Brill told me. "What I wanted you to see, though, is his rigidity. This is catatonia-a classical pattern that used to appear frequently in schizophrenics. Now it's mysteriously becomIng very rare, and we hardly see it any more. The same thing IS true of the manic type-the noisy, excited patient, always talking and moving around. And the old-style halluci- nating psychotic who would SIt In a corner all day chattIng with his own